Monday, April 23, 2012

Brooks Interview


Brooks Interview

1.     What do you like about textile design?
I like that it can be used in different applications, and how versatile a pattern can be.

2.     When was the last time you created a pattern?
I made one with you two weeks ago, but before that early this year. I don’t have a lot of time to because I’m teaching all the time.

3.     What is your favorite medium to create a pattern with? Least favorite?
I like the preliminaries such as tracings with paper and pencil. My least favorite medium is definitely acrylic.

4.     When did you realize you wanted to become a teacher? And why?
I was a textile designer and in the fashion industry for 1 year, and left to see how I would do in the interior design industry, worked in that field for a bit but I got a bad reference from my previous boss because I left so I just felt like I wasn’t doing well and not doing what I had liked. I decided that teaching fit the life I had wanted, with art being in my life everyday.

5.     What led you to textile/surface design?
Went to Rhode Island School of Design for a painting major, that I knew wouldn’t be very realistic for employment, then I went over to an illustration major and I realized I didn’t have my own unique technique like other illustrators, so I decided I didn’t belong there. Finally, a friend suggested that I go into a textile/surface design major. I decided to go into that field because I believed that every time I created a pattern, I was reinventing my style as an artist and I liked that.

6.     What was your favorite class at FIT?
I loved color theory. It was one class that I could use the knowledge from that could be used everywhere. It impacted how I viewed color.

7.     What is your biggest accomplishment?
I had shows that I was in, and I won awards. But, I think that my biggest accomplishment is helping my students get into college.

8.     Was there a lot of work for textile/surface design?
Yes, a lot of painting, a lot of research to create good unique ideas. What I would do was leave class go have dinner, work out and then from 6:30 to midnight I would be painting.

9.     What was the best pattern you ever created?
I used wax and luma dyes to make this oriental patchwork with dandelion seeds and maple leaves. I was gold, black and chartreuse. I made it for a women’s clothing print on like a silky jacket. My sister framed it and hung it in her house, and it is still there.


Here is Brook's best pattern. I love it aswell. She did a fabulous job.


10. Do you like weaving?
I had a specialization in weaving in the second two years at FIT. I chose weaving over printing. I have to looms in my house. It has more math than printing but I just loved the yarn choices and placement choices.

11. What was your favorite liberal arts class?
I liked fabric science, and art history (textile/fabric art history), and Shakespeare. I had already had a lot of credits carried over from RISD to FIT, so a majority of my liberal arts classes were out of the way. I liked the design art history classes though.

12. RISD vs. FIT?
At RISD I was able to try different things I would have never been able to try at FIT if I went the first year. At RISD there was not specific major for the first year, so there I got to experiment with what I liked and what I was good at. Such as, a 3D class I didn’t even think I would be good at. I also found a love for stone sculpture that I wouldn’t have found if I went to FIT my freshman year of college. I also took a jewelry design class at FIT because at RISD I had liked it.

13. How much money do you think you have spent on art supplies all together?
Easily $10,000. I buy a lot of supplies that I don’t need. A lot for my students because if they didn’t have them they wouldn’t be able to do a lot of things they do now. My fashion students are always looking for something new to do a rendering with, so I buy supplies for them to use. Such as watercolor crayons, concentrated water color dyes and different kinds of paper.

14. Colored pencils vs. crayons?
I like colored pencils a lot better. Especially watercolor pencils.

15. Who was your favorite teacher in college?
There was no one specific, but I feel like the teachers you learn the most from can be ones that you don’t specifically like.

16. What was your least favorite class?
I really didn’t like this class with teachers that are really traditional. This one class I had to create patterns of roses and no matter how perfect I thought my roses were, my teacher was never satisfied. I just didn’t like that.

17.   What was the craziest pattern you ever created?
It was for a tissue box, I took water color pencil and drew flowers and then for the background I did different brown tones and did rubbings of a paisley stamp.






Here are some samples of Brook's work:





This is a pattern she created that won an award. It was meant to become a rug.




Here is the border of the rug, that won the award,


Obviously Brooks is very talented, and I am very grateful for everything she has taught me. I hope to be as successful as she is one day. 

Weissman Interview

1. How did you get into the fashion industry?
Well my father was the CEO of a company named Gimbles and my mother was the head buyer. I worked for the company for awhile. I then went to college for ergonomics which was me designing objects for people. I ended up working with my friend who owns The Design Library and he hired me as a salesman.

2. Is there a lot of math in your job?
Just regular adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing. Nothing hard.

3. What kind of clients do you have?
 We have really big clients like Marc Jacobs, Micheal Kors, Giorgio Armani, Ralph Lauren, Banana Republic, Calvin Klein and many others.

4. What does a typical visit look like?
We either go to the client or they come here. We show them what we think they are looking for. Usually they like every one pattern out of ten that we pick. So we have to pick out hundreds of patterns for them to be inspired buy and pick up.

5. How do you decide on what to pick?
They give us some specifications on what they like, and we pick a bunch out that we think go well with those specifications.

6. What is a typical day for you?
I am either here in the office setting up meetings, filling out paper work and picking out designs, or I am in the city or in another destination seeing my clients and showing them the designs I picked and selling them or renting them out.

7. What kind of person do you have to be to do what you do?
You have to be an open, extroverted person that can talk to people, have small talk and relate to others. You have to be friendly and personal, but also be down to business and get the job done. You have to be a good listener to figure out what exactly your client wants and do the best you can to get them what they want.

8. How do you know what is coming up in trends?
I know what the trends are from my clients. They pick designs that will be for clothes 2 years from now. So if Banana Republic requests stripes and small plaids 2013 menswear, I know that those designs will be in and whats happening in 2013.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Keep on Working

I have been continuing to get my pictures finished for my gallery I will be presenting. I still have to mount some more, but all the patterns, doodles and art work is already all done. I also have to practice what I am going to say, such as my college essay piece, and my inspiration paragraph.

There is a lot to be rehearsed and set up but I still have a lot of time to get it all done!

I have been talking to Brooks everyday, we have discussed my project many times and everything is going well.

I also have a planned meeting with my neighbor Richard Weissman, where I am going to show him all the patterns I created... excited to show him everything I have created.

Just continuing to work!!

Saturday, March 31, 2012

FIT!!!

Yesterday I got an acceptance letter from FIT!!!!

AHHHHHHHH!!!!

I am so excited!! ! ! ! !  ! ! ! ! !

just wanted to tell my followers I will be going to school for my passion, textile/surface design, in the fall!!!

Friday, March 30, 2012

Presentation Preparation

For my final W.I.S.E presentation, on May 2nd, I plan on doing a gallery sort of thing. 


I have not decided on the location, whether it be in the senior cafeteria, or near the auditorium. 


I have realized how much work I have done since I had to mount it all on black chip board. 


I probably have 70 things to hang, around there. I might cut things out because there is so much!


I made a list of how I want the gallery to go:

-college essay, how I am a chameleon and art is my sun

-start at renderings of flowers from Junior Year and talk about my introduction to textiles

-first time at FIT, (peacock painting, wood painting, nesting doll drawing) talk about commute and how I loved it

-first pattern, making it with Brooks, and section in my college essay about creating it

- second time at FIT ( man, torso, purple lady portrait, watercolor man, man/woman drawing)

-talk about inspiration (FIT inspiration paragraph) and pictures of inspiring art, textile book  patterns

- doodles, the start of all my projects

- plate doodles and process to final plates made

-stationary made from plate designs

-making a plaid

-working with dye

-transformations
 ~flower doodle ---> CD case
~moving eye doodle---> croque--->patterns made
~Apple doodle--->stems ogee patterns---> repeating patterns
~mono print #3---> black and white croque--->separated face
~silence of the lambs doodle---> flower patterns
~eye border doodle---> tetris croque--->repeating patterns made
~minimalist doodle--->red card minions--> repeating patterns 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

From Croque To Repeating


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    This was one of my first designs created on the computer. It is a croque








Then I created all of these repeating patterns:

































































This is one of my favorites.
This pattern was just a couple of the patterns I had already made just place on top on one another.






Tremendous Transformations

It all started out as a doodle

A doodle I thought would become a border, but somehow I decided to look at it differently.






 So I created this.

A croque, that I didn't know how to make repeat.




 But once I was taught, 

These are what were made.













Same for this little doodle, I created on the plane to Paris, France.





 That was then made into these:




 

 And then repeated into these actual patterns:












The last transformation.

A doodle made on the train home from the city.

Simply out of boredom.
                       


Created into this:



and then repeated:





I am very happy I was able to learn how to make REAL PATTERNS. 

MORE TO COME!